Police in Australia have finally worked out how to charge two Australian Defence Force Academy cadets at the center of the ‘Skype sex scandal’.
At the end of last week, the two were charged with “using a carriage service to cause offence" for their alleged role in broadcasting a fellow female cadet engaging in consensual sex. …

Erm...

"Things which are conducted privately may be appropriate, but they are not appropriate if they are conducted in public, including through the use of social media.”"

Are we supposed to understand by this that it would've been fine to do it the old-fashioned, non-social-media based way - film yourself having sex with someone without their knowledge or behaviour, then mail copies of the video to all your mates?

@adamill

I think that would count as "social media"; it's social and it uses media! The mechanics - whether it was Skype, a live video feed, a hole in the wall, a T3 line or dial-up - aren't really the issue. I was in Australia when this broke and there was discussion in the papers about whether the concealed camera invalidated the consent and this should be charged as rape, but I left before I heard any more.